The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 4, 1937, Page 2

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HOTTER MEN O'WAR > Madrid Government Angered REPRISALS AGAINST by Third Seizure of Span- ish Merchant Ship (By the Associated Press) . Nasi officials met in -curt mood Monday to draft a new pronounce- ment on retaliatory action by their warships in Spanish waters. said the pronouncement would deal—among other things—| ;, with seizure by the German cruiser Koenigsberg of the Spanish steamer | + Marta Junquera, third such vessel to be detained or halted by the Nazi men o' war. They admitted capture the 500-ton Marta Junquera. =At the same time the official Ger- man News Agency announced the; German freighter Pluto had been stopped by armed Spanish trawlers! 21 miles off Bilboa prior to the seiz- ure of the German freighter Palos, “key incident in the new Spanish | marine tension. Forced to Fellow The Pluto was reported to have been forced to follow two of the|T trawlers for two hours on Dec. 20, after shells had been fired across her} hows, ‘Dispatches from Bayonne, France, Monday said shipping circles had heard reports of the “provisiona! capture” of the Pluto by an armed Basque patrol ship. It was not known if the incident was that of Dec. 20 or @ hew one. The semi-official report Pluto capture said: “The Pluto incident reveals that the Red Spanish government a long time ago ordered its sea force to act against German merchant ships, even if outside Spanish waters.” ‘The Nazi leaders met in the face Of Basque and Spanish government of the | refusal of a German offer to end the campaign against Spanish ship- ; ping in return for full satisfaction for seizure by Basque nationalists of| Los the freighter Palos. | Meanwhile, the Spanish govern- tent’ mapped a naval campaign of reprisal against ‘German warships after announcing Nazis had halted in Spanish waters followed shortly ‘ after a declaration in Valencia by Foreign Minister Julio Alvarez del 5 . Vayo: i, effect.” ; ® fist refuse) of a German offer to 7 and a Spanish prisoner were re- Y turned. ¢/We are firmly resolved, come what H may, not to permit another single from the German fleet and to reply as soon as they occur ‘{ with all the means at our command. (“Orders have: been given to this The Vslericia government nounced through its Paris embassy cease molesting Spanish ipping it the cargo of the Nazi freighter Palos Warner to Be Seated With Board Tuesday ‘W. G. Warner will take his seat on | for Friday. the board of Burleigh county com- missioners at the ing of the county governing body/afternoon in Daytona Beach, attor- an their. first regwar meeting! neys sald. ‘Warner succeeds H. F. Tiedman, who did hot seek re-election, There will be no other changes in other| week, despite mobilization of 200 na- county offices until Ernest Elness, in- t Seanires takes office as| ouster. The governor charged her May 4, which will necessitate the appointment of an acting treasurer to serve office. © Phone 511 —~and each coat is _ Now brought | an- ! i | Fargo, cléy. . WEATHER FORECAST ‘For Bismarck and vicinity: Fair tonight and Tuesdey. Severe Coid Wave tong ontinued cold Tues- a: For North Dakota Fair tonight} and Tuesday; severe Cold Wave to-; night; continued cold Tuesday. ‘or South Dako! Partly cloudy night and Tuesd: severe Cold to 3 Wave tonight and in south portion Tuesday. For Montana: Tuesday; colder severe Cold Wav For Minne: Partly cloudy, yere Cold tonight; Tuesday fair, severe Cold Wave in east and! south portions. | WEATHER CONDITIONS | A trough of low pressure extends | from the Great Lakes region we ward to the north Pacific coast, M neapolls 29.16 inches, while high ur ‘are centered over the ce tral Canadian Provinces, e and over the South . 3038 Inches. Preci tation has occurred from the Lakes region north while generally fair \ ils over the central and ricts, Temperatures dro considerably throughout the dian Provinces, but warmer v prevalls throughout the central stales and the northern Border states. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 27.59, Red to 5 : F Sunrine, 9:29 Sunset, 5107 PRECIPITATION Tor Bismarck Station: Total this month to date Normal this month to dat January lat to dat Normal, January lst to date .. Accumulated deficiency to date NORTH DAKOTA POINTS Low- Snow tonight and of Divide, with BISMARCK, clear .... Devils Lake, cldy. Williston, clear . Jamestown, rnow Grand Forks Minot, clear Amarillo, Texas, clear. Boise, 1daho, cldy 5 Calgary, Alta., sn Chicago, Ul, cléy. Denver, Colo. cléy . Des Moines, Iowa, peld Dodge City, Kan., pcld Edmonton, Alta. cl Havre ont 32 snowing snow! Minneapolis, . Modena, Utah, clear .. - Moorhead, Minn., cldy. No, Platte, Nebr., pi Okla, City, O1 nie eo c2081903 MErt9C2 02 2EIm BSLLARSSosesses. Winnipeg, Dissolution of Court _ Injunction Is Sought Tallahassee, Fla., Jan. 4—(#)—Gov. Dave Sholtz’ appointees to succeed Mrs. Irene Armstrong, ousted woman Mayor-commissioner, and other city officials of Daytona Beach, applied to the supreme court Monday for dis- solution of a circuit court injunction prohibiting them from attempting to jon meet-|@ circuit court hearing set for this Ayers April 6 until he takes| and first native-born chief executive Legislators WELCOME! You and all our old friends are cordially invited to see our complete line of LIQUORS. Co or ee) Complete Line of Johnston’s Candies | ~ @@0e0 @ DRUGS & SUNDRIES eee @ 8 Broadway Drug Store “Moderate Prices te Suit All Purses 5th and Broadway ; EVERY COAT Remaining in Stock a beauty or it would never have been here— to the lowest price of the season, and that price is ", Price - take control of the city’s affairs. The supreme court declined to take im- 103 States. " nesota. ‘oo |Judith mountains, \ IN PS NAVA | Weather Report TSNOW BLOCKS MANY DIED HERE HIGHWAYS IN STATE; PREDICT COLD WAVE All Richland County Highways Closed; Mercury Drops to -20 at Forks All highways were closed in Rich- land county, only the main roads were open in the Fargo area and drifting snow threatened to tie up traffic in several other sections of the state Monday,. the state highway depart- ment reported. A severe cold wave was forecast for’ tonight by federal weather bureau of- jficials with the mercury expected to dip down as far as 15 or 20 degrees below zero in some parts of North Dakota. Snow-blocked roads and below-zero temperatures were responsible for four deaths in the Northwest over the week-end and the colder ther which swept eastward across ne- tion played a part in many of the 190 lives lost throughout the United Grand Forks Records -20 At Bismarck, the mercury did not drop below zero until Monday morn- ing but three other state points re- ported temperatures ranging’ from -20 at Grand Forks and -16 st James- 1} town to a -2 at Minot. Eight degrees above was the coldest it got in the Capital City before 8 a. m. The severe cold brought fresh snow and blocked highways to western Mine A strong wind drifted roads so badly in some sections of the neighboring state that snow plow crews {were helpless and were ordered to postpone operations until the storm abated. Four Lewiston, Mont., high school students—two boys and two girls— 0 }owed their lives Monday to a barbed wire fence which they ran into after becoming lost in a blizzard in the the Associated Press reported. Stumbling through the blinding snow they ‘came onto the fence and guided themselves along it for more {than an hour until they reached an unoccupied cabin, where they were rescued by a searching party. Mild Weather at End rain in the east and freezing temperatures from coast to coast signaled the end Monday to the unseasonably mild holiday weather in the northern states. The 190 traf- fic and accident victims brought to Snow fn the west, 06 11166 the total number of persons who died violently during the Christmas and New Year three-day holidays. Near Sonora, Calif. rescuers finally reached a family of four, snow- pound eee days 3 oe but wind and snow of near Proportions hindered @ search for three of five men killed in an explosion aboard the mail boat Marold II in northern Lake Michigan. A 36-mile-an-hour wind hit Sidney, Neb., while a 50-mile-an-hour gt accompanied a snowstorm at Living- ston and Bozeman, Mont, SHIPMENTS GROW mediate jurisdiction, but set a hearing | The decision eutomstically stayed ‘The .middle-aged housewife sought extension of an injunction which al- lowed her to cling to the office last tional guardsmen to enforce the with excessive expenditures. ss AYERS BECOMES GOVERNOR Helena, Mont., Jan. 4.—(7)—Roy E. was inaugurated tenth governor of Montana Monday. IN ALL AREAS OF US, EXCEPT HERE But Decrease Is Only Slight Considering. _ Drouth, Shippers Report Business will be 9.2 per cent more active.in the nation as a whole dur- ing the first quarter of 1936. accord- ing to the forecasts of the 13 regional shippers’ advisory boards made pub- lic Monday. Only in the northwest and central is a decrease in the total of -ship- ments for the quarter forecast. The drop in the area comprising Minnesota, the Dakotas, Montane, upper Wisconsin and the upper pen- Bismarck 10.2 per cent, whereas that for the central west area is estimated st 18 per cent. The biggest increase forecast is 26.1 per cent in the Great Lakes indus- trial region, followed . by 19.7 per cent in the Pacific northwest and 13.6 per cent in the Allegheny district. - Twenty-nine cofimodities are con- sidered in the estimate and increased transportation is anticipated for 28 of these with decreases in only six. ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUN! -|dependent Board for west, districts. both hit by drouth, insula of Michigan is estimated at The body of Dr. J. Greshman Machem, (above) Presbyterian. leader who died in a Bismarck hospital of pneumonia New Year's day, has been taken east for funeral services in Philadel- phia Tuesday. Burla) will be in Baltimore. * 8 & BODY OF RELIGIOUS. . LEADER SENT BAST Funeral Services for. Rev. J. Gresham Machen to Be Held Tuesday Afternoon Rev. J. Gresham Machen, Presby- terlan fundamentalist leader who died here Friday, will be buried Tuesdsy afternoon at Baltimore after services at Philadelphis, it was announced here late Saturday by Rev. Edwin H. Rian, general secretary of the com- mittee on home missions and church extension of the Presbyterian Church of America, who arrived here at noon Saturday. Rev. Rian and Rev. R. B. Kuiper of Westminster Theological Seminary, of which Dr. Machen was the founder, will officiate at the funeral rites. The body was accompanied east- ward by Rev. Rian and by Mr. and Mrs, Arthur W. Machen of Baltimore, who arrived in Bismarck a few min- utes after Re’. Machen: died: ‘The Christian world has suffered Great loss in the death of Dr. Ma- chen,” said Dr. Rian. “Bible-believers “I personally have lost my dearest and warmest friend. : S}editor of the Leader for leadership will go on . The’ Presby- terian Church of America, Westtiiin- ter Theological Seminary and. the In- Presbyterian Foreign Missions, all of which he or- ganized, are founded upon the eternal truths of Holy Writ. , “It is our hope and prayer that God ‘will prosper these institutions because they are faithful to His word and be- cause they ere trusting in His grace “Dr. Machen’s memory will be a continual’ inspiration to everyone who knew him.” SPEAKERS OUTLINE LIONS 37 PROGRAM he Members Review Accom ‘ments of Past Year at Luncheon, Meeting i Accomplishments of the past year were reviewed and plans for 1937 were Outlined in @ series of five talks given Monday at the regular luncheon meeting of the Bismarck Lions club. Speakers included Dr. A. M. Fisher, president, who set the 1937 member-. ship goal at 60 and reviewed the club’s | advancement during 1936; Dr. F. B. Strauss, chairmen of the membership committee, who talked on the need of & representative membership pointing out that the duty of the members Bismarck; Judge I. C. Davits, club the | historian, ane traced the club’s his- the drouth, area: grain, hay, straw and alfalfa; cotton seed and prod citrus, potatoes and livestock. is disclosed by the products in which automobiles, trucks and parts izer; cotton and coal and coke. CONTINUE D it was reported. taken to Hadds' bought the residence recently. AMERICANS LOSE AG: ond five-game losing night—making it 10 defests games—when they cision to the Mon! an American ‘league in hockey Chicago Blackhawks, 3 to 1. former sole leaders, 3-3. at the University of North Dakote. rs except oil, fresh fruits, other then the . largest increases sre expected. These are: ore and concentrates,| presided ; iron| meeting was given a rising ‘vote of and steel; lumber and forest pro-| thanks for the ‘work done in. behalf ducts; agricultural implements and|Of the organization. Prust, his wife vehicles other than automobiles; cit-| and two children are leaving later this rus fruits, lime and plaster; cement| Week for Sioux. City. Ie. where he and brick and clay products; fertil-| will here failed to yield any fingerprints, Jt was not used in the Mattson kid-, naping, but was believed to have.been way hell in & plot to kidnap the sixeyesr-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Grace Franklin, Sr. who |AIN New York, Jan. 4—()—The New York Americans completed their sec: & 4-2 de- Canadiens in The Montreal Maroons walepee oe trimmed Toronto, 4-3, and the Bos- ton Bruins turned beck the Rangers, ————— Hockey is the newest mejor sport organization in May, O. Bailey, who spoke on the ternational convention which Fred Peterson, who The anticipated trend of business | tell in D. D. Prust take over his dutts as’ manager of the Montgomery Ward company’s Members of the committee for next week will be D. E. Shipley and Al Simon. Guests of the club included from page one’ Block Highways in. |ana't. 4. tuncher of Bmerce Kidnapers’ Search : 106 3rd St. was first to the club and second to|| late next summer in: THE TALK OF THE TOWN The California Wave Nook Permanent Waves:Priced $3.50 to $8.50 CUT OUT THIS AD and bring it with you-it entitles you to $1.00 DISCOUNT on any of our permanent waves, or 25c DISCOUNT on our special oll shampee and finger wave. CONTINUE from page one. Welford Seeking To Disqualify His Successor by Suit 8 group of intimate friends, and was on the job at the governor's office Monday morning, but his formal in- suguretion will not occur until 3 . m. Wednesday, at which time the jouse and senate of the state legis- ede meet in joint session to r hig measage. y This document was expected to be ready for the printer, some time Mon- day. Langer did n6t divulge any of the which he will make, but said that it will require about an hour and 1§ minutes to deviver. He was making a final revision of sit Monday, sandwiching work on it be- tween other activities. Faces Court Contest ford, before retiring from the office of governor to which he was elevated upon the disqualification of Thomas H. Moodie nearly two years 8g0, was to approve filing of a civil suit contesting the right of his suc- nt was made Saturday night that a suit would be filed in Burleigh county district court charg- ing Langer’s disqualification because of alleged violations of the corrupt , Leibert Crum is act- elected. wete charged in the papers prepared under’ Welford’s direction. ‘These included: a La of an appointment said to have been made on or about Bed 18 at Crosby to one C. J. Mure 2. Agreed to appoint-Sheriff Peter McArthur of Fargo as warden at the otera by promising to stop al) real estate and chattel mortgage foreclos- ures and prevent sales on- execution for the collection of debts where, in his judgment, the debtor was deserv- his assistance as governor. pent: $5,500 in the campaig by him”-as a subterfuge to enable him to'evade the state laws regulating the expenditure of money for election purposes, which. limits a. governor's ex- Ppenditures to 15 per cent ofthe salary pald by the office, in this case 9600. cwapaper, is owned by hiss abe Due newspaper, is ow. YY pub- lished articles in his behalf valued ae $5000 for which no accounting was made, ee 7. That he paid Oscar E. Erickson publisher and Oscar Buttedah] as publishing NS ped articles advocating i -made no comment on the Bult or the. charges contained in it but..said he would file his answer within the 30 days required by law. Several announcements as to policy- making personnel in the various de- partments were expected during the course of the dey but the only ap- pointment definitely made Monday morning was that of P, H. McGurren of Devils Lake as his private secre- tary. This was announced some time Refused to Leave Railroad Station e ‘New York, Jan. 4—(4)—Mat- Ww 43, was arrested | on 8 charge of f , disorderly conduct wi he refused to leave a rail- station. ©. Railway Police Sergeant Charles judge, I only drink on. holidays,” he pleaded. “Give me another chance.” The judge suspended sentence ‘after Broderick promised to keep away from stations, No Co-Signers AUTO LOANS Phone 782 TO RECLAIM DUST BOWL AREA OF U, §,) safes: Creation of Highway Dra Ditches Into Lakes His Washington, © Jan. William. Lemke, party candidate for presidéent, stud- ied Saturday a legislative plan to reclaim the entire dust bowl region of the United States through an ex- ee system of small artificial One of the last moves of Wel-! “The re-elected North Dakota con- gressman began assembling his ideas in the form of a bill to convert road- side drainage ditches into 1,000,000 lakes and reservoirs in a national water conservation program. “All we have been doing so far is surveying .and fooling’ around,” Lemke exclaimed. right away in restoring water levels the next ten years wil posible for us even to make a begin- ning.” . He had not decided priation would be necessary the undertaking. Dakotan’s proposal-would be na- tional in scope, the first attack on the problem would be confined to the interior of the nattion—from the east- ern slope of ey Pocky eb ted to . n Violations ississippi river an m the Seven specific violations of the law peeatien borde Tn this-area, Lemke proposed: fed- eral- and state govertiients, counties, towns: and “individuals cooperste in STARTS: WEDNESDAY THEY'RE BACK IN A BRAND NEW HiT Dashiell. Hammett's thrill- . Other Real Estate . ~- Reserves for Bond Deprecisti Proposal’: defeated. Union Soon “Unless we start make it im- National in wae what appro- to in While the Nene ler to the Gulf of Mex. Statement of The Bank of North Dakota . State of North Dakota Bonds: - Mill & Elevator Series (Par Value) .. Real Estate Series (Par Value)....... (Par value) '” Loans to Farm Loans ,to State Institutions. Other: Collateral Loans .. ‘Homebuilders Contracts . Loan Collecti Municipa) Bonds and Warrants (Par Value).. Other Political Subdivision Warrants (Par Value) - Bills Receivable: : ‘Loans to: Operating Banks Now Closed lion Department. —_——— Expect to Be Settled There as as Governor Wel- ford Leaves CAPITOL TODAY Jean George | ARTHUR BRENT In the dizzy doings of the dame who wanted to be “More Than A Secretary” Hitting the funny-spot with the maddest manhunt since the first boss discovered his secretary knew more than ' typing and spelling! Added «: Vs Color Cartoo 2 «News - Novelty Bismarck, North Dakota December 31, 1936 : RESOURCES ‘U.S. Treasury Notes (Par Value) ......... ..+-$ 4,000,000.00 U. S. Treasury Bonds (Par Value) ........ +++» 8,508,050.00 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation and Home Owners Loan Corporation Notes (Par Value)..... 1,037,525.00 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation and Home Owners Loan Corporation Bonds (Par Value).... 4,591,150.00 Cash and Due from Reserve Banks and Trust “Companies ..........0..005- Banoonnn seceeess, 4,484,684.85 $17,621,859.35 Federal Housing Administration Title II Loans... Bank Building ...... - Real Estate Sold on Contrac' Undivided Profits . Deposits: Certificates of Deposit—Public Funds ......... Certificates of Deposit—Private Funds Savings Accounts .............. Individual Checking Accounts Cashier’s Checks Outatanding Certified Checks Outstanding Depositary Banks—Reserve Country State Institutions—Checking TOTAL LIABILITIES .. County Treasurers—Checking Accounts School Treasurers—Checking Accounts aly sree Coens oun a4 ‘ownship Treasurers—C. ing Accounts...... State Treasurer—Checking pl inate Accounts LIABILITIES R§ = H. McGurren, private secre~ to Governor Langer, has brought Mrs. McGurren and thelr daughter, Biel, here from MEO jvoaue ted al a femily onneth, is attending the A son, Kenneth, . Dakota at Grand University of ‘North Deenter, who 15 arried, in - married, ys to what formal entes- er TODAY AND TUESDAY Dizzy with Daffiness ... Loaded with Laughs! Youth and Romance on a Grand Spree... with the world’s funniest comics! -- And a bevy: of glorious girls! News and Popeye Cartoon 478,000.00 4,636,500.00 —_5,114,500.00 2,048,265.81 2,351,713.83 91,450.99 —4,491,480.68 255,866.25 3,100.00 —______. $30,238,168.94 508,868.69 76,881.75 ——__ $30238,168.94 Se inal

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